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Parties: Essential to Democracy. History of parties Early parties Jefferson and Madison, Democratic-Republican Adams and Hamilton, Federalist. Party Functions. Organize the competition Party column ballot vs. Office block ballot Unify the electorate Organize government patronage
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Parties: Essential to Democracy • History of parties • Early parties • Jefferson and Madison, Democratic-Republican • Adams and Hamilton, Federalist
Party Functions • Organize the competition • Party column ballot vs. Office block ballot • Unify the electorate • Organize government • patronage • Translate preference into policy • Provide “loyal opposition” • “honeymoon”
Nominating Candidates • Recruitment • Caucuses & direct primaries • Rise of “candidate-centered” politics
Minor (third) Parties • Often personality-driven • Forever a two-party system?
Party Patterns • Theory of “Realigning Elections” • The 1932 FDR Realignment • Divided Government
Shifting Populations of the Parties • Democrats • New Deal Coalition united low-income, working class whites with minorities • African-Americans – still solidly Democratic • Catholics, Southerners, and Hispanics – once Democratic, now moving Republican • Republicans • White middle- and upper-class Protestants • Major gains in middle class, particularly in the South • Evangelicals – the “Religious Right”
Parties as Institutions • Structure: • National Party Convention – every 4 years • Nominate Pres. & VP Candidates • Adopt Party Platforms • National Committee • National Chair • State Organizations
Parties in the electorate • Party Registration • Party Identification • Dealignment?